Sunday, November 10, 2013

Are Cops too lazy or corrupt to do honest Murder Investigations?

My friend, Todd Tucker, died at his business location, Tucker
Transportation, at age 49, of an alleged heart attack, around a year ago
in Winchester, New Hampshire. Todd's wallet was missing and has yet to
be found. It had his license, credit cards, and cash in it. That alone
is suspicious and his death should not be ruled "of natural causes" in
my opinion.

Todd was found with injuries to the front AND the
back of his head. His shirt was pulled up to nearly his neck and he was
found upside down and purple in his business bathroom. That to me looks
more like a struggle or fight then someone who fell while having a heart attack.

Todd
allegedly had just found out that a nearby "townie", also with a
business, had charged 1000's of dollars of auto parts and/or hardware at
the local hardware store on Todd's account without Todd's permission.
That is a number of crimes, I assume felonies wrapped up in each count
of theft. As far as I know there has been no investigation into the the
thefts or Todd's lost wallet. As far as I know, there had been no
investigation on who possibly murdered Todd Tucker.

Doesn't this sound like it should be a murder investigation?
Are Winchester, New Hampshire, and too many cops in police departments, nationwide,
too arrogant, corrupt, and lazy to even do a murder investigation?

When
I worked 2nd shift at Plum Pak, a factory, police would wait in the
middle of town for any excuse to pull over those leaving work, going
home. I was pulled over just after midnight in Winchester, New
Hampshire, when I worked at the factory for just a week. I was doing 34
in a 30 and the way I was treated was if I may have murdered someone. I
got pulled over just day later for having a headlight out. The same cop
wanted to write me a ticket saying that it was probably like that a
while, I asked the police officer, "if it was out last night, would you
have pulled me over?" So, I got it fixed the next day with a used bulb
from one of Todd Tucker's soon to be junked Dodge, that Todd took out,
and put in for me.

-

In Springfield, Massachusetts, a
"solved murder" was investigated for another 3 months, so officers could
sit home, drink, or do whatever and get overtime for an investigation
that already should have been listed as over. A bartender who works, or
worked, at the cop bar, called "The Ale House" told me the story.

In
the early 1980's I worked the night shift at a 24 hour convenience
store. Springfield Police Officers would collect "protection" in uniform
getting oral sex from prostitutes in the dairy cooler sitting on 3
empty stacked dairy crates asking me to act as their look out. White
officers would put minorities in protective custody and under arrest and
would borrow the dumpster gate keys and flesh with blood hanging from
it would be on the brick wall near the dumpster when they were done.

Cops
would come in bragging about getting college and other young girls to
have sex, or perform oral sex on them in the back of a cruiser on what
officers called "Date Night". Attractive girls and women could be
threatened with arrest for driving drunk or in the possession of drugs.
They would leave the woods' side back door open to not lock themselves
in as they committed rape and/or sexual assault. Cops would often
brandish their throw away pistols and bags of drugs to plant on
citizens, left in the glove compartments of cruisers. Some cops would
complain that officers on other shifts would steal their throw away pistols and drugs for planting as evidence.

The
Police Union for the Springfield, Massachusetts, had to stop doing drug
tests on officers for residual alcohol, cocaine, and heroin, as a very
large percentage of officers tested positive with only the first batch
of 30 being tested. Police had refused to write speeding and parking
tickets while they had a dispute with management to financially starve
them to the negotiating table.

-

Why do I talk about
Springfield, Massachusetts, and Winchester, New Hampshire police in the
same post? Well with both departments, Civilian Oversight of Police
would have helped prevent this abuse of taxpayers and threat to public
safety at the hands of police. Police should not police themselves. I
proposed Civilian Oversight of Police in the State of Connecticut and [this happened to me].

I
intended for this post to purely about Todd, nothing to do with me, or
my unresolved case of police acting as terrorists, rapists, drug
dealers, thugs, and organized crime and armed revenue collectors, not
law enforcement. Bottom line, I would like a real investigation be done
into what happened to Todd and bring those who may have murdered and
ripped off Todd to justice.

* * * *

This is why I, Steven G. Erickson, think that cops can be too lazy or arrogant to do an honest investigation: